SafeSpace: fighting loneliness, together

Article by Pressly Pratt for The Daily Californian, UC Berkley’s official student newspaper.

UC Berkeley students are developing a website and mobile app to connect campus students experiencing mental health issues with other students who face similar experiences.

The startup, called SafeSpace, placed first in the Improving Student Life category of UC Berkeley’s 2016 Big Ideas contest, an annual competition aimed at providing students with startup ideas and resources to help turn ideas into realities. The team won $10,000 in the competition — money it has used to begin developing the app and website.

Over the course of the competition, the team decided to create a mobile app and website to foster communication and connection among students suffering from mental health problems. The project now partners with the University Health Services program Cal Bears Say Hi. Like SafeSpace, the Cal Bears Say Hi program works to foster peer-to-peer relationships to make students feel more comfortable and less isolated on campus.

“The team decided to create a mobile app and website to foster communication and connection among students suffering from mental health problems”

Monica Casanova, a public health major who is minoring in public policy and political economy, came up with the idea for SafeSpace when she was working on a paper about mental health support systems on campus. She suffered from severe depression her freshman year and said she wanted her paper to reflect her personal experiences of trying to navigate the resources on campus, which she felt were lacking.

After working on the project, Casanova decided she wanted to find a way to improve communication among students and lessen the sense of loneliness she felt while experiencing depression. “When I tried to seek out care, it didn’t seem to work out for me,” Casanova said. “I really didn’t want that to happen (to anyone else).”

“Casanova decided she wanted to find a way to improve communication among students and lessen the sense of loneliness she felt while experiencing depression”

After Casanova applied for the Big Ideas competition, she posted on Facebook groups looking for other students to join her team. Ann Nguyen, a campus senior and a co-founder of SafeSpace, said she got involved because she felt the campus didn’t prioritize mental health. She wanted to help provide additional resources to students experiencing mental illnesses such as depression and eating disorders.

Nguyen added that as an Asian American, her culture does not weigh mental health as highly as physical health, which can require medical interventions. She said SafeSpace aims to fight against such stigmas and normalize mental health disorders. She hopes SafeSpace will encourage people to reach out when they are experiencing poor mental health before they break down, she said.

“Usually, it’s at the point when it’s too late when they start talking about it,” Nguyen said. “We really want to try to get people to reach out for help before they reach that breaking point.”

“For a student body of about 36,000, the campus has only about 50 counselors”

Nguyen and her team initially approached Big Ideas as just a funding source, but over time, she realized it was much more than that. She said the competition provided her team with connections to experts in the field, helped them clarify their vision and inspired them to continue with the process.

Big Ideas program manager Adrienne Chuck said SafeSpace was one of Big Idea’s “greatest projects.” For a student body of about 36,000, the campus has only about 50 counselors, which she called a “ridiculous ratio.” Chuck said that the team’s approach of creating a peer-to-peer platform was incredibly innovative and that she believes the project will have a wide-reaching effect on UC Berkeley.

Chuck added that the team underwent extraordinary growth as entrepreneurs during the nine-month competition. “The growth that we saw in this team over the course of nine months was incredible — they were so focused on making the Cal environment better,” Chuck said. “I was so inspired watching them dedicate themselves to solving this problem.”